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Portrait of Tony L. Farnham

Tony L. Farnham

Research Scientist

301 405 3856
farnham@umd.edu 1207E Atlantic Building
My primary interests involve characterizing the physical and dynamical properties of small bodies in the solar system, including comets, asteroids, Kuiper Belt objects and Centaurs, and exploring how their properties change with time. As an observational astronomer, I utilize various types of data: in situ spacecraft observations (Deep Impact, Stardust, DART, Rosetta), ground-based telescope data, and measurements from space-based observatories (HST, TESS). I use these data to directly measure the characteristics of solar system bodies, as well as using modeling and numerical simulations to infer properties that cannot be measured directly.
Research Areas:
Solar System
Research Centers & Collaborations:
Small Bodies Node
Space Missions

Latest Papers

Ejecta Mass Estimates from the DART Impact Plume Inferred from LICIACube Images

| The Planetary Science Journal
Author(s): Ramin Lolachi, David A. Glenar, Timothy J. Stubbs, et. al
UMD Author(s): Lioudmila Kolokolova, Tony L. Farnham


High-speed Boulders and the Debris Field in DART Ejecta

| The Planetary Science Journal
UMD Author(s): Tony L. Farnham


Elliptical ejecta of asteroid Dimorphos is due to its surface curvature

| Nature Communications
Author(s): Hirabayashi, Masatoshi, Raducan, Sabina D., Sunshine, Jessica M., et. al
UMD Author(s): Derek Charles Richardson, Tony L. Farnham